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Measles cases are surging in Europe and the US. This is what the anti-vax conspiracy theory has brought us

1 day ago
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It’s easy to say in hindsight, but also true, that even when the anti-vax movement was in its infancy in the late 90s before I had kids, let alone knew what you were supposed to vaccinate them against, I could smell absolute garbage,After all, Andrew Wakefield, a doctor until he was struck off in 2010, was not the first crank to dispute the safety and effectiveness of childhood vaccines,There was a movement against the diphtheria-tetanus-whooping cough vaccine in the 1970s in the UK, and a similar one in the US in the early 1980s,The discovery of vaccination in the first place was not without its critics, and enough people to form a league opposed the smallpox rollout in the early 1800s on the basis that it was unchristian to share tissue with an animal,So Wakefield’s infamous Lancet study, in which he claimed a link between the MMR (measles, mumps and rubella) vaccine and autism, going as far as to pin down the exact mechanism by which one led to the other, was new only in so far as it had all the branding of reputable research, when in fact it was maleficent woo-woo, a phenomenon as old as knowledge.

It was noticeable, though, that it fell on parched ground – a lot of people were very keen for it to be true.That was partly simple news appetite: vaccines are inherently boring.Devised by humans co-operating with one another, motivated by nothing more complicated than a desire to help the species – and indiscriminately, no one baby more worthy of protection than any other – there is no animating conflict here, nothing hidden, no complexity.Is there anything more tedious than humanity at its finest? So wouldn’t it be at least piquant if it turned out to be a giant mistake?Alongside that, there was a perception that autism diagnoses had gone through the roof, and that wasn’t wrong.The increase in recorded incidence was 787% between 1998 and 2018, and no amount of, “Steady on, guys – it might just be because we’ve got better at understanding what we’re looking at” would deter people from wishing for one simple answer.

Wakefield also landed his bogus study just as performative parenting was getting under way – a new understanding of child-rearing, in which parenting well became the summit of moral excellence, and the way to prove your credentials was to be excessively cautious about absolutely everything.It seemed pretty Calvinist – the fundamentals of parenting superiority were mysterious, but you could spot the Chosen Parent by the fact that they never ran with the herd.The depressing thing about the anti-vax timeline is that the collective global mind worked as it should and yet didn’t work at all.Other scientists tried to replicate Wakefield’s results, and couldn’t.The right questions were asked and he was discredited.

The lie might have gone around the world, but when the truth finally did get its pants on, it won a decisive victory,Yet a generalised distrust of vaccination as a concept had been spawned, ready to meet any fresh infectious disease,That didn’t delay the Covid vaccine rollout – it’s hard to see how it could have been faster – but did sully the triumph with the loud disquiet of a minority who thought they were being deliberately poisoned by the state,The effects of the MMR controversy, specifically, are revealing themselves now, nearly 30 years later: measles cases in Europe are at the highest levels in 25 years; in the US, cases are at a 33-year-high; last week it was reported that a child in Liverpool had died having contracted measles,It’s unknown whether the child was vaccinated (no vaccine can guarantee complete immunity) and it doesn’t matter – it wouldn’t make it any less tragic if that child’s parents had been caught in the swirl of misinformation, or any more tragic if they hadn’t.

And it wouldn’t be germane anyway: everybody is better protected when everybody is vaccinated.This is never a decision you are making just for yourself.It’s probably the most depressing conspiracy theory there is, not because the impacts are so much graver than some cranks who believe the Earth to be flat, but because vaccination is the most concrete proof of how much we rely on one another’s care and rationality.That’s true beyond disease – we also need each other for democracy, science, culture, civic life and everything – but in no other area can you see that, count it and put it on a graph.Zoe Williams is a Guardian columnistDo you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a response of up to 300 words by email to be considered for publication in our letters section, please click here.

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Thousands of vehicles sit idle at EU port as Trump’s tariffs leave their mark

The Port of Antwerp-Bruges has been turned into a giant car park with thousands of cars, vans, trucks and tractors bound for the US sitting idle as manufacturers try to avert the worst of Donald Trump’s tariffs.Figures released by the port show a 15.9% drop in the transport of new passenger cars and vans to the US in the first six months of 2025 compared with the same period last year, with a sharp decline emerging in May – one month after the US president announced his “liberation day” tariffs.Exports of trucks and what they call “high and heavy equipment” is down by almost a third at 31.5%

about 9 hours ago
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Fear of being ordered back to office affecting UK staff wellbeing, poll finds

A fear of being ordered back to the office is having an impact on workers’ wellbeing, according to a poll, after a string of companies issued return-to-office mandates.More than a third (38%) of workers surveyed said recent news stories about companies hardening their stance on office attendance had negatively affected their wellbeing, highlighting the tug-of-war between employers and their employees.More than four in five (84%) employees who work in a hybrid way – splitting their time between the office and a remote location, such as home – said it had a positive effect on their overall wellbeing, including their mental, physical, social and financial wellbeing.More women (87%) than men (80%) said they believed hybrid working had improved their wellbeing in the survey of 3,600 UK employers and employees across a range of industries in the public and private sectors between late April and early May by the recruitment company Hays.The main worry about returning to the office more frequently was cost, potentially additional commuting expenses, as almost six in 10 (59%) of those polled said worries about their finances would affect their willingness to spend more time in the office

about 11 hours ago
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To hoard or not to hoard? UK consumers on the pros and cons of cash

It was while walking to his local Co-op that Ty, a 27-year-old student in Brighton, noticed a strangely long queue for the cashpoint.In the shop, a staff member told Ty the payment systems were down after a cyber-attack. It was cash only. But Ty didn’t need to join the queue. Instead, he felt vindicated

about 12 hours ago
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Reeves to say cuts to City red tape will bring trickle-down benefits to households

Rachel Reeves will claim that cutting red tape for City firms will have trickle-down benefits for households across Britain, as she tries to drum up support for a new financial services strategy.A raft of regulatory reforms are due to be announced by the chancellor on Tuesday, in what the Treasury says will be the “biggest financial regulation reforms in a decade”. It will come before her Mansion House address to City bosses during a dinner at Guildhall in London on Tuesday evening.Under the “Leeds reforms” – which Reeves will announce during a “summit” with top City executives in West Yorkshire – the chancellor will declare that paring down burdensome regulation is key to unleashing UK growth and ultimately ensuring that households are better off.“I have placed financial services at the heart of the government’s growth mission – recognising that Britain cannot succeed and meet its growth ambitions without a financial services sector that is fighting fit and thriving,” Reeves will say

about 17 hours ago
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Hot weather lifts UK spending as fans and sports gear add to sales

Retail sales in the UK recovered in June as hot weather drove spending on electric fans, sports and leisure equipment, but households remained under pressure from high living costs.The snapshot from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) showed total sales grew by 3.1% year on year in June, after a sharp drop in May, as record-breaking temperatures and promotional offers encouraged consumers to spend.Official figures showed UK retail sales collapsed by 2.7% in May, the sharpest monthly decline in almost two years, in a “dismal” month for supermarkets as the economy unexpectedly shrank by 0

about 17 hours ago
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Buyers of new EVs under £37,000 can get discount under UK scheme

Buyers of new electric cars priced at less than £37,000 will be able to get a discount of up to 10% under a new UK government scheme, a move that may benefit some cheaper Chinese models but leave Tesla fans still having to pay the full price.The Department for Transport has reintroduced a grant, which had been scrapped in June 2022, to encourage more drivers to switch from petrol and diesel to electric vehicles.The £650m electric car grant will offer a discount of up to £3,750 for the “greenest” vehicles based on sustainability criteria, with a second band offering a discount of up to £1,500.The move may benefit cheaper electric vehicle makers such as BYD, which has overtaken Tesla in sales in the UK. Prices of new cars built by Elon Musk’s company start from about £40,000

about 18 hours ago
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Reform council leader urges Labour to reconsider curbs on care worker visas

1 day ago
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Genocide prevention could become legal priority for UK government

1 day ago
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‘It’s very personal to me’: Darren Jones on his £500m plan to fight child poverty

2 days ago
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Charlotte Church joins unions and campaigners in opposing ban on Palestine Action

2 days ago
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UK government announces £63m funding for EV charging infrastructure

2 days ago
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Why Labour should target happiness alongside economic growth | Heather Stewart

2 days ago